Twenty-eight-year-old
David Wright was convicted Wednesday of conspiring to kill Pamela Geller and
other Americans on behalf of the Islamic State group.

The MSM also has a price on her head. It initiated
its fatwa soon after she began studying and then inveighing against Islam (after 9/11) and its
mealy-mouthed shields and shills in the West, such as Geraldo
Rivera.

There is a handful of her caliber of woman in
America and a few in Britain and Europe – Katie Hopkins, Elisabeth
Sabaditsch-Wolff, Brigette
Gabriel, and Bat Ye'or,
to name but a few of the few – and they are all collectively branded,
stigmatized, and persecuted by the MSM and the political elite as “haters,
“bigots,” “Islamophobes” and the like. They are protested and maligned without
thought or the pretence of civil behavior.

The MSM fatwa against
Geller brandishes not the knife or the truck or the sword, but the smear, the
defamation, the character assassination, and ample slings of mud. In that way
the MSM partners with CAIR and all its affiliated Muslim Brotherhood sired organizations
in a constant campaign to denigrate her and her sisters in arms.

To those who do not
wish to think about the essence of Islam, but would rather cowardly slink
behind George Bush’s mantra that Islam
is “a religion of peace,” Geller has a prophetic warning:

“You can avoid reality, but you
cannot avoid the consequences of avoiding reality” (p. 87).

Those consequences
keep piling up the bodies and victims in jihadist attacks inspired
by Islam, almost weekly.

I am principally a
novelist. I have over fifty titles on Amazon. These include Sparrowhawk, a six-title series on the
origins of the American Revolution (in which there are no Muslims), three
detective/suspense series, and a handful of nonfiction titles, most of them
featuring critiques of Islam. My first fictional foray against Islam was We Three Kings, published years ago and
still selling. In it, an American entrepreneur is pressured by the State
Department to give a rare gold coin to a Saudi sheik (he doesn’t). My second
major foray was The Black Stone, in
which a New York reporter steals the Black Stone from the Kaaba in Mecca (in
1930) and is pursued by agents of The Muslim Brotherhood,
all the way to San Francisco. (It’s a better story than Hammett’s The Maltese Falcon, if I must say to
myself).

I have several
heroines in my fiction. I must admit that, regardless of their stature, none of
them holds a candle to Pamela Geller. I could not invent a heroine like Geller.
Had I invented one, readers would paraphrase Cyrano about his nose, “you must
be exaggerating!”But I don’t need to
invent her. She’s real. I don’t need to exaggerate. She is tireless. She wakes
up in the morning, and it’s back to work, reporting on Islam and its latest
atrocities. Informing her large readership of the most recent developments in
the increasing dhimmitude and submission to Islam of American and Western
authorities

A striking resemblance:

Lynda Carter as Wonder Woman

Her magic bracelets, Wonder
Woman’s, do not repeal bullets. Geller’s bracelets are reason, logic, and a
love of America. They do, however, repel the smears and malignity of her
critics in government and in what she calls regularly the “enemedia.” Her
“lasso of truth” captures numerous MSM dhimmi lights, and Muslim spokesmen, in
their lies and taqiyya.

FATWA’s foreword was
written by that blonde giant of the Netherlands, Geert Wilders, who is a
kind of Ragnar Danneskjöld hated by Dutch government officials, and by those
super-sensitive social justice warriors in nijabs,
thobes, abayas, and kufis, a.k.a. Muslims. In Atlas Shrugged,
Ayn Rand’s novel, Danneskjöld is a pirate who raids the looters and seizes the
cargos of the looting governments. In one episode, he sinks rather than seizes
a shipload of copper ore appropriated by American looters.

She has also
campaigned against Islamic honor killings; a subject she feels strongly about and
even launched a bus and subway ad for and has followed surviving escapees from the
Islamic practice until they were free. She has battled municipal transportation
authorities for the right to place her ads, which match each cause she has
pursued, on buses, in subways, and in other public venues. She has sued the
authorities when they rejected her ads as “demeaning” to Islam and Muslims and
has won almost every case when a judge has ruled in her favor on First
Amendment and freedom of speech grounds. When reading FATWA, pay special attention
to her chapter “The Ad Wars.” You’ll learn more about the dhimmification of America,
and the erosion of our First Amendment rights, than you thought you knew.

Geller wrote on page
102:

Geller
with one of her titles

The enemies of freedom invoked
freedom of speech to kill freedom of speech. Free speech is for them and them
alone….It spoke to the heart of the matter and the reason why we fight. Those who
enforce free speech restrictions expose who and what they really are. The enemies
of freedom mean to destroy the founding principles of this nation. [Parenthetically,
Geller in her columns and in FATWA often echoes Ayn Rand when she refers to the
U.S.
having the only moral government in history.]

On a final note, Geller,
ever the fashion plate, brings glamour and style to reason and rationality.

Edward Cline, American Novelist

Edward Cline was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in 1946. After graduating from high school (in which he learned nothing of value) and a stint in the Air Force, he pursued his ambition to become a novelist. His first detective novel, First Prize, was published in 1988 by Mysterious Press/Warner Books, and his first suspense novel, Whisper the Guns, was published in 1992 by The Atlantean Press. First Prize was republished in 2009 by Perfect Crime. The Sparrowhawk series of novels set in England and Virginia in the pre-Revolutionary period has garnered critical acclaim (but not yet from the literary establishment) and universal appreciation from the reading public, including parents, teachers, students, scholars, and adult readers who believe that American history has been abandoned or is misrepresented by a government-dominated educational establishment. He is dedicated to Objectivism, Ayn Rand's philosophy of reason in all matters.